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Glory - Actions motivated by the desire for recognition, or for great accomplishments even if unknown.

Power - Actions motivated by the desire for wealth, authority, or self-improvement.

Each Virtue has a Statement associated with it that refines the character's relationship with that Virtue.

Whenever a character attempts something especially difficult or dangerous that is perfectly aligned with the Statement of the Virtue they are rolling, they may double their Virtue for that roll or add a d8 to their pool, player's choice. This championing their Virtue. Make a record of the number of times you champion each Virtue.

Whenever a character attempts an action that directly contradicts any of their Statements (regardless of the Virtue they are rolling), they add a d4 to their roll. This is called challenging their Virtue. Make a record of the number of times you challenge each Virtue.

Championing and Challenging Virtues leads to characters possibly changing their Statements, changing the ratings of their Virtues... and contributing to character advancement somehow.

The Attributes are the very traditional RPG way we describe a character's physical and mental capabilities.

The main optional set is Distinctions. Distinctions function similarly to Distinctions in other Cortex games except that they also include much of a character's talents-- they double as Skills/Specialties, and players may choose up to two Distinctions for each dice pool without spending a Plot Point.

Distinctions also double as Power Sets, even though most Distinctions will not have any powers. Each Distinction has its own SFX and Limits.

Unlike other heroic Cortex games, Powers are rarely rolled in die pools. Power ratings are normally used to modify the effects of their associated SFX, and to give guidelines on what characters with that power are capable of.

The final optional "sets" are Weapon and Momentum.

Weapon functions almost exactly like Cortex Prime, except that a Weapon's rating also inflicts extra Stress: if the attack deals greater Stress than the rating, the opponent takes the weapon's rating as a second hit. If the attack deals less than the weapon's rating, step it up by one.

Finally, there's Momentum. Momentum is a temporary resource used only in combat, that allows characters to enhance their attacks and defenses, and to perform various special maneuvers in combat. Generally, a Move has a minimum die rating before it can be performed. Special Moves step Momentum back, while Super Moves consume it entirely.

When a player rolls an offensive action or a reaction against an offensive action in combat, they keep a second Effect Die for Momentum. Definition of "offensive action" shall be discussed at the table. Most Complications should qualify, and some Advantages.

On a successful attack or offensive combat maneuver:

If the Momentum Effect Die is bigger than Momentum, replace Momentum.

If the Momentum Effect Die is smaller than Momentum, step Momentum up.

On a failed attack (or a successful reaction) if the Momentum Effect Die is bigger than Momentum, step Momentum up.

Shroompunk is a standalone game using the Sellswords & Godwars (or Barbarians of Lemuria) rules in a brutal, psychdelic Sword & Sorcery setting based on equal parts Conan the Barbarian, Heavy Metal magazine, and Nintendo Power. Turtle-knights joust in mid-air from the backs of giant birds, while muscle-clad barbarians trade fireballs with carnivorous plants in the Warp Pipes that interconnect all of the Nine Worlds. A thousand years of peace and prosperity ended abruptly, almost twenty years ago, and a generation of heroes has arisen who only know the lure of easy coin and the song of the flashing blade.

Shroompunk will involve extensive changes to the Archetypes system of Sellswords & Godwars: all-new, all-different Occupations, all-new Ancestries (only the Human remains from core), entirely different magical Spheres and Circles, and so forth.

One thing I am considering is the inclusion of different "game modes" (optional rules) in the core rulebook to reflect different rules environments. These would modify the function of Archetypes and the rate at which feats are awarded.

Sellswords & Godwars: Old School Player's Options in Fantasy Roleplaying is my own foray into the OSR community, attempting to emulate-- very loosely-- the character customization possible with the Player's Option supplements and with other late '90s (and early '00s) roleplaying games that inspired them.

It does this by taking the SRD rules-- the PFSRD and the SRD 5.1-- and converting all of the automatic class bonuses (proficiency, BAB, saves, spells per day) into Category Bonuses (based on archetypes and feats) and converting the bulk of the class/race features into feats.

If it sounds like feats do a lot of heavy lifting, you are correct: these are big, juicy 5e feats, that also provide Ability Score Increases and, as mentioned, Category Bonuses and Class/Race features.

Characters get a number of "talents"-- feats without ASIs or category bonuses-- at 1st level from each of their Archetypes, their Ancestry and one or more Occupations, plus one Feat at each odd level including 1st. Every 4th, characters get a bonus feat drawn from whichever Archetype has fewest. This allows them to build their character to match their concept at a much earlier level.

My real name is Viktyr C Gehrig; the spelling is the result of an unfortunate phase I was going through. I am a (late) thirty-something game designer and aspiring author. I've been playing roleplaying games for over 25 years and designing them almost as long; I started with AD&D and Gamma World, switched to 3.0 and then to 3.5 when they came out... but balked at Fourth and Fifth. I've played dozens of systems in the intervening years, and the only ones I didn't house rule were the ones I didn't bother playing twice.

I live in Wyoming, splitting my time between Cheyenne and Laramie. I'm both physically and psychologically disabled and hoping maybe my dice and pen might make me a taxpayer again, or at least make my pensioneering a little more comfortable. I am a devout Ásatru heathen, though the heterodoxy of my beliefs pushes the envelope even of a religion that prides itself on eating its self-appointed popes.

These forums are for having fun. They're for helping other people have fun, and for asking people to help you have fun.

They are not for grinding your sociopolitical axes, regardless of what they are or if I agree with them.

And they are not for your gatekeeping bullshit.

Treats the other posters with hospitality and respect, or else.

Recognizes that games & playstyles you do not personally enjoy, and the gamers who do enjoy them, are legitimate roleplaying games and forms of entertainment, or else.

Refrains from tribalist exclusionary bullshit, in all of its myriad varieties, or else. Unless people are using these forums to hurt other people and exclude them from gaming spaces, they are welcome here-- and people who try to change that will not be.

And, finally, don't fucking jam me up with law enforcement. No copyright infringement, no illegal commerce, no pornography of any kind, no discussion of real-life means of acquiring the same. The internet is full of web services designed to make finding these things easy without endangering my livelihood.

All you need to stay out of trouble here are a little bit of common courtesy and a little bit of common sense.